Twitter gives women a fighting chance

TWITTER activism in the form of hashtag campaigns has gained momentum in giving a voice to women fighting gender-based violence (GBV). In South Africa, the phenomenon began in 2017 with the #MenAreTrash campaign sparked by the murder of 22-year-old Karabo Mokwena by her boyfriend, Sandile Mantsoe. That campaign gave rise to more campaigns such as #MeToo , #NameYourRapist and #AmINext. On July 19, South African twitter woke up to yet another movement against GBV: the #SueUsAll campaign, a response to DJ Fresh’s court order stopping Ntsiki Mazwai from levelling rape allegations against him on social media. The emergence of #SueUsAll is as alarming as it is confusing. Mazwai, the one the court order was sought against, is not the victim. Rather, she is a third party, who through the #NameYourRapist campaign of 2019 is spreading allegations of rape on behalf of Penny Lebyane, DJ Fresh’s ex-girlfriend. More than a pursuit of the golden rule of law that one is innocent until proven guilty, t...